Having a hard time finding time to jump in but I just want to let you know that I've been reading your classes and saving them in a folder for future use. They have been so helpful. Thanks so much for doing this.

I rarely write dialogue. I usually avoid it like the plague so this should be interesting.

*****

"I really feel like I've screwed up my life. And I'm supposed to be a Christian," confided Melanie as she slumped down on the sofa crying. "I didn't know who else to talk to."

Linda reached out, pulling her into her arms. "Oh, honey, I'm glad you came. You see, I once felt just like you do. Let me tell you a little story."

*****

I used the word "confided" instead of "said" because I felt it was really needed here in this particular intimate setting. I haven't read the other contributions yet because I knew it would really discourage me if I did.

Green Leaves wrote:I rarely write dialogue. I usually avoid it like the plague so this should be interesting.

*****

"I really feel like I've screwed up my life. And I'm supposed to be a Christian," confided Melanie as she slumped down on the sofa crying. "I didn't know who else to talk to."

Linda reached out, pulling her into her arms. "Oh, honey, I'm glad you came. You see, I once felt just like you do. Let me tell you a little story."

*****

I used the word "confided" instead of "said" because I felt it was really needed here in this particular intimate setting. I haven't read the other contributions yet because I knew it would really discourage me if I did.

When I start "Oh, honey..." should that be a new paragraph?

Carol Penhorwood

Carol, it's interesting to me that you avoid dialog. Why is that? By the way, publishers love it--because today's readers want "white space", and dialog is one way to get that (the other is short paragraphs--great for pacing).

Totally personal preference, but I'd use 'said' in place of 'confided'. As I mentioned in the class, readers tend to gloss over those attributions, and the essense of 'confided' is covered in "I didn't know who else to talk to."

No new paragraph needed there. Linda's words and her actions go in the same paragraph.

Jan, I'd probably write more dialogue if I wrote more prose. I know your classes will help me enormously. And the writing challenges are helping me get my feet wet as well. Poetry just comes so much more naturally to me.

I've been testing the waters lately with the challenges but don't seem to do very well. Not complaining, after all, these are first attempts.

glorybee wrote:FreedomWriter, thanks for this little bit of inspiring dialog!

I didn't intend to get into the mechanics of punctuation, but since you and a few before you have made a few common errors in capitalization and punctuation, I just can't let them go. I've corrected the areas of concern in red, below.

FreedomWriter wrote:"I don't know who you think you are," Lance said to his wife. "I'm the one working a real job while you just sit there, typing away on Faithwriters."

"Really? You really think you can launch your dream with the fire of passion alone?" said Lance.

"I'm convinced of it," Mrs. Lance said as she floated out of the room.

(These characters are purely fictional.)

Did you follow the changes I made in punctuation and spelling?

More to the point, how did you feel about the use of "said" in your dialog?

Jan-
How do we know when to end with a period or with a comma?
I thought I read that if it forms a complete sentence within dialog that we end it with a period. If we interrupt the dialog for a tag we would place a comma?
I would love to know!
Thank you.

As for 'said', if you can 'hear' or visualize the conversation without the descriptive dialog tags, then I feel great!

Ohhh! I was also wondering if this part of the story was correct:

alone?" said Lance.

I notice I didn't capitalize 'said' and you also left it alone. So, that's right?

Last edited by FreedomWriter on Wed Feb 24, 2010 4:40 am, edited 1 time in total.

-Rikki"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."Jeremiah 29:11

Started my very long journey May 29th 2012 toward continued education.Destination: Doctor of Psychology.

So, if the dialog tag was a complete sentence, I would have capitalized the new sentence?

Instead of 'said Lance', if I would have said 'Lance responded with a cocky attitude', then the sentence was complete, although Lance had to be capitalized because he was a proper noun.
Maybe...
'He responded with a cocky attitude.'
That would show that 'He' needed to be capitalized not because he is a proper noun but because the sentence was complete...right?
(subject and predicate)

-Rikki"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."Jeremiah 29:11

Started my very long journey May 29th 2012 toward continued education.Destination: Doctor of Psychology.

Well...this is why I like to leave the grammar and punctuation to Ann (who is on a brief vacation)--she KNOWS all this stuff, and I just wing it. But this is my feeling, which you should really check out online (or ask Ann over in her forum).

Here's your original sentence:

"Really? You really think you can launch your dream with the fire of passion alone?" said Lance.

Which is fine as it stands. If you changed it to

"Really? You really think you can launch your dream with the fire of passion alone?" he responded with a cocky attitude.

...I'd keep the 'he' lower case, because it's all still connected; the 'responded' refers to his words in quotes at the beginning of the sentence.

On the other hand, if you wrote it like this...

"Reallly? You really think you can launch your dream with the fire of passion alone?" He snorted, and snapped open his newspaper.

... in that case, I'd capitalize the 'He', as the action isn't tied to the dialog.

By the way, 'he responded with a cocky attitude' isn't the best writing. His words were cocky; to tell the reader his attitude was cocky is redundant. I tried to add to the impression of cockiness in my example by having him snort and snap the newspaper, with the inference that he's dismissing her.

Whew! This is exhausting--grammar and punctuation are HARD for me, believe it or not.

Other questions? Bring 'em on.

Last edited by glorybee on Wed Feb 24, 2010 12:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.

“The doc says I have low blood pressure.” I could see tears ready to spill down his cheeks.

“What does that mean? How low?” I asked, trying to understand his distress.

“Fifty three over forty eight,” he said. The tears were running freely.

“I have never heard of blood pressure that low,” I said. I wondered if hopelessness had gotten a foothold in his life.

*******************************************These dialog lessons are fun! After years of writing newsletters, Bible studies, and church bulletins I am really enjoying fiction. I need lots of practice.

Kathie TollifsonDeconut

Kathie, you did really well with the lesson (said) and also with next week's lesson (tagless dialog). You have the same issues as some previous posters with punctuation and capitalization. I've corrected those in red, above. Take a look at what I did, and read through some of the previous posts for my reasons. If it's not clear, feel free to ask!

"Aw Mar, give me a break," said Jake. "Noone does their homework on a Friday night."
"You do Son, especially when you are playing football all day Saturday and Sunday."
"It's probably gonna," Jake threw up his hands for emphasis, "pour rain".
"Get going!"

I love dialogue! (sorry...had to use that EP)
You're doing a great job with these classes, Jan.

Here's part of a story I wrote of someone with a stroke.

“Time for your pill, Mary Dear.” He helps her sit straighter in her wheelchair and adjusts a pillow behind her left shoulder. “I hope the tea isn’t too hot.”

With a towel under her chin and a teacup in his gnarled fingers, he slowly, gently gives her a sip and wipes the corner of her mouth. The clock ticks away the minutes as he takes a sip from his cup and gives her one.

“The leaves are starting to turn red already. It will be winter soon.”

She twists her neck toward the window. “Un-n-n.”

“The pastor’s wife brought some banana bread. She’s such a thoughtful woman. Would you like some with your tea?”

“Un-o-oh” Mary jerks her head and knocks the cup from his hand, sending it shattering across the linoleum floor. “O-o-oh!”

“Don’t worry about that. It was almost empty anyway.”... Carefully, he lifts her small frame onto the cotton sheets and tucks her in. He brushes the droplets from his balding head with his shirtsleeve and readies the house for the night.

Finally, with a sigh, he lies down beside her and turns to see her clouded blue eyes watching him.

“Unh –uv-oo.”

He kisses her forehead and whispers, “I love you too, Mary Dear, and I always will.”

I'm still struggling with how to write a whisper without using the word. I can show a shout, but it's hard to show a whisper.

Sometimes, I try to write a whole story with only dialogue and no tags, but you're getting to that next week.

Philippa, superb job with the punctuation and capitalization. I wouldn't change any of the content, either--I understod and could easily imagine both of your characters. My small changes:

1. This might be a UK/USA thing--but 'no one' (at least in the US) is two words.

2. Add a comma before a person's name (or nickname) when you are directly addressing them (this is covered in Ann's grammar class).

3. When you interrupt a person's speech with a dialog tag, be sure that you do it in a natural-sounding place. Again, this might be due to different rhythyms of Aussie and American speech--if so, ignore. But I think your third sentence sounds better now. By the way, this is a good technique for adding sentences with a variety of structure.

4. This one is MOST important--you really need an entire blank line between every person's dialog.